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Authors: Jeff Abbott

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BOOK: Cut and Run
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She sat back down on the bed. James Powell. She had not thought of him in weeks. You could not kill a person and wipe them
from your mind, but James Powell did not haunt her every day.

James Powell. Her sons. The past rising up out of nowhere, this phone call and the strange man today, it could not be coincidence.

Eve got up and dug her car keys out of her purse.

She headed out the door.

13

‘I have a surprise for you.’ Tasha was a little breathless after the sex. The first night with Paul, him wine-drunk, had been
nothing to savor. But tonight, nervous and seeking release, he had been a smarter lover, conscious of her pleasure, taking
an interest in it first with his fingers and mouth. The good, leisurely lovemaking done, she smoothed out a raised lock of
his brown hair. ‘It might make your night,’ she whispered, getting up from the bed.

‘Baby, my night was already made.’

She went to her computer, checked her e-mail, keyed a button. Papers peeled out from the printer. She picked them up, read
them, tossed them on his naked stomach.

‘What’s this?’ he said.

‘Credit reports.’

He picked up the pages. She waited for him to speak. He blinked at the data, but it was clear his mind was fuzzed so she sat
down next to him.

‘About your problem with Eve,’ she said. ‘I know a guy who’s a black hat.’

‘A what?’

‘A hacker. Gets through computer systems. He worked with me at Houston PrimeNet as a security consultant. We both lost our
jobs at the same time. Energis was our big client. They went under, we went under.’

‘Yeah,’ he said.

‘So my friend Ralph, he’s what you call socially maladjusted.’ She ran a finger along Paul’s leg, watched the flesh goose-bump.
‘He started hacking because he couldn’t find a job for the longest time. He hid himself a Trojan inside the Visa and MasterCard
authentication systems.’

‘A what?’

‘A Trojan.’

Paul still gave her a blank look. ‘It’s not a condom, baby,’ she said. ‘It’s hidden computer code that does what you want.
Get you account information, for example. He uses it now and then to steal an account. He’s been asking me business advice,
ways we could make the most money off of this little private access. He doesn’t want to get caught before he can make serious
profit.’ Tasha patted the papers. ‘I can solve your Eve problem.’

‘You could get me five million?’

Tasha took a very subtle, calming breath and locked her smile in place. ‘No, sweetpea. He can’t get you five million in cash.
But let’s say Eve planned to run. And let’s say she took the precaution of getting new credit cards under new names.’

Paul’s eyes widened.

‘When a credit card is used for the first time, it creates an initial entry in the account file. So I asked him to find all
first-time credit charges in Houston and Galveston for today. For planes, trains, rental cars. Hotels if she’s hiding out.
And to key it to women’s names or cards with the same initials as the name.’

‘Holy shit.’ Paul stood up and scanned the pages. ‘Her name’s not here.’

‘No. And this only works if she hasn’t used the card before. But there’s twelve women who bought plane tickets, one named
Margaret Scott to Detroit. That could be Eve. Or if she’s hiding in town, she might’ve rented a room. Three rented hotel rooms
as initial charges as of eight tonight. Alice Masters at the Doubletree over on Post Oak. Deanna Lopez at Moody Gardens, down
in Galveston. Emily Smith at the Hilton out by Addicks, out on the edge of town.’

‘My God, baby, you are amazing.’ Paul kissed her,
hard, slow, grateful, and she felt him rise in her hands. She tickled him with her fingertips.

‘There’ll be time for that later,’ she said. ‘See how I can help you?’

‘Tasha, what a team we could make.’ He tongued her ear.

‘Sweetpea.’ She cupped his chin with her hands. ‘If I give you Eve Michaels, what are you going to give me?’

He smiled, put her hands back on his erection.

‘That’s a given,’ she said. ‘I’m asking for a bonus.’

‘Okay.’ He kissed her. ‘But I need to make a call, get guys out to those hotels.’ He started to scoot off the bed.

She gave him a little squeeze and he stopped, one leg on the floor. ‘Let’s move beyond bonus to an actual cut.’ She curled
her feet up under her rear.

‘You’re cute when you’re smart,’ he said.

‘I’m never not cute, then,’ she said.

‘How big of a cut?’ A tease touched his voice, one she liked. He ought to shove her out of the way, make those phone calls.
But he was giving her time to listen. He was passing her test. She slid her fingernail down his strong Roman nose, along his
cheekbones, as though she was mapping out a course.

‘Call your guys first. See if they can find her.’

He hurried to the phone, made the calls while she watched. Two guys each, dispatched to each hotel. When he was done, he came
to her, gave her another kiss.

‘Now you,’ he said.

‘My cut should be about a half million.’

He laughed, looked blank, laughed again. ‘Don’t we aim high?’

‘I’m serious. Ten percent, finder’s fee. I got to pay Ralph for his help. And I want to quit stripping and get a new job.’

‘What job?’

‘Eve’s,’ she said. ‘Let me be your money minder from now on.’ She moved her fingertip along his mouth, stuck the fingertip
between his lips. He flicked his tongue across the nail, kissed the flesh.

His voice thickened as her finger roamed down across his stomach, tickled at his navel. Think you’re qualified?’ he said.

Okay, he had flunked. ‘Qualified?’ Tasha pointed at the papers. ‘I handed you Eve and your five million. You lose her this
time, she gets away, maybe I don’t ask Ralph for his help again. We can let her walk off if you aren’t interested in playing
nice.’

‘How about I give you and Ralph fifty K? It’s a lot for a few minutes work.’

‘Not if it saves your ass.’ She got up from the bed, knelt down, searched under the bed for her panties. ‘I’m sorry I bothered.’

Tasha didn’t hear him rise from the bed as she stood. His fist closed in her hair and he yanked her head back, bared her throat,
gave her flesh a little nip. He eased her onto the mattress, his grip still tight. It didn’t hurt, much, but a hot boil of
anger rose in her chest.

‘You’re not going. We’re not done,’ Paul said.

‘Let go. Please.’

‘You don’t threaten not to help me. You got that, Tasha?’ He pushed her face down into the sheets. ‘Now. What are you going
to do?’

‘Help you.’

The pressure on her head eased slightly and his voice softened. ‘Besides that, baby.’

‘Paul,’ she said, ‘I can do a lot more for you than be good in bed.’

‘Clearly. You’re the smartest person I know right now, Tasha. But I don’t like it when you make me get rough with you.’ He
let go of her hair.

Like his ill temper was her fault. She crafted a careful smile, made it rise on her face, looked up at him with a mix of patience,
desire, and calmness. She reminded herself that right now, she needed him. That wouldn’t always be the case. And she filed
this nasty minute of roughness away, to remember, to use later. ‘So. I help you, you’re gonna help me, right?’

He kissed the top of her head. ‘You usually deliver the goods before collecting the reward. But I’ll give you and Ralph a
hundred thou, final offer.’

‘Okay,’ she said. She didn’t believe him.

Now he smiled, kissed her lips. She stayed still. ‘Cool, baby, and you’ve given me an idea with Ralph. I want to know everything
Frank Polo’s been charging on his accounts. Eve, too. And Bucks.’

‘Bucks?’

‘Tasha, he’s my friend. But that doesn’t mean I trust him right now.’

‘Do you trust me?’ she asked.

‘Sure I do,’ he said. ‘Sure I do. And that’s why I’ve got a real special job for you to do.’ He leaned down, gave her a slow,
gentle kiss, and this time she kissed back.

14

Gooch slipped the hostess a ten-dollar bill and nabbed a large booth in the back of the Pie Shack. Whit sat across from him.
The place had the treasured atmosphere of an old neighborhood café: mirrored walls, neon art of thick slices of pie on plates,
coffee steaming up from a mug at every booth. The huge window by the booth that faced out into the lot was smeared with rain.
Thunder sounded far off, a brief rumble.

‘Now we wait,’ Gooch said.

Whit glanced back at the doorway. ‘I shouldn’t sit here, by the window. She could see me. Run.’

‘I doubt she’ll know who you are after thirty years, Whit.’

‘I don’t know.’ He fidgeted in the booth, checked his watch. ‘She’s late.’

‘She’s going to be. At least fifteen minutes. If she’s survived this long working for a crime ring she’s going to be cautious.
She’ll put us on the defensive.’

‘She’s not going to talk to me in a busy place.’ The Pie Shack was full. The two closest booths – there were no tables – were
both occupied, one by three gay guys rehashing their evening at a local club, the other by a wine-happy quartet of women,
laughing at themselves and digging through thick slabs of meringued pies, attempting to sober up with pots of black coffee.
Both groups seemed wholly captivated by their own conversations. A riser of plants separated the booths from each other, obscuring
views and dulling sounds.

Whit watched a Lincoln Navigator with tinted windows
drive through the lot, mist rising from its tires. Then a pickup truck, then a Lexus.

‘Easy, boy,’ Gooch said. ‘She’ll talk to you. She has a nice-sounding voice.’

‘She’s probably more nervous than I am.’

‘She has reason to be. Sit at the counter and keep your back turned to the front door,’ Gooch said. ‘You won’t scare her off
that way when she walks in.’ Gooch cocked a finger at him. ‘It’s gonna be okay, buddy.’

‘Thanks.’ Whit took a seat at the long, curving counter. Turned his back to the front door. He ordered a cup of decaf, dosed
it with milk, and hunched his shoulders over the curl of steam. On his right a woman in a security-guard uniform plowed through
an omelette doused in chili and cheese; she gave him a glance that showed she noticed his bruised face but said nothing. On
his left a young man with three earrings ate butter-soaked waffles and read
Sports Illustrated
.

Whit stirred the milky swirl of his coffee. No mirror was mounted above the bar to let him watch arrivals and departures.
But he heard the jingle of the door as it opened and closed, and each time the little bell tinkled he tightened his grip on
his coffee cup. He tried not to care. He glanced over at Gooch’s booth; he could barely see the top of Gooch’s crewcutted
head over the divider of fake ivy.

He had played out in his mind a thousand times what he would say to his mother. Why did you do it? What did we do wrong? How
could you? I hate you. I forgive you.

The day she had left, his four oldest brothers had gone with family friends to see a movie in Corpus Christi. He and Mark,
the littlest boys at two and three, had played in the backyard, worn themselves out playing chase while his mother sat and
watched. She’d put them down for naps and, while they slept, she put her bags in her car,
placed signed divorce papers on the dinette, and left Port Leo forever. He imagined that before she walked out the door she
kissed him good-bye, cuddled him, told him she was sorry. She probably had done none of those things.

Sweat tickled the undersides of his arms, the backs of his legs.

The door jingled.

He waited, watched the hostess leading a young couple to a front booth. He relaxed a moment. Then he saw an older woman, her
back to him, dressed in a rumpled suit and no raincoat, heading right for Gooch’s back booth.

‘I don’t know you.’ Eve Michaels slid into the booth. She clutched her purse close to her right side. My God, she thought,
the guy was a bruiser. Built big and broken-mirror ugly. Hands as big as hubcaps.

‘I’m Gooch.’ He didn’t rise from the booth, wisely not making any move to scare her, but he did offer one of the plus-sized
hands. She didn’t shake it. She had her hand on the Beretta, pointed at him inside the purse. She flicked her gaze to her
left; the kitchen door was right there. In case she had to shoot and run.

‘That’s a very nice purse, by the way,’ Gooch said.

‘Thank you.’

‘What are you aiming at me? A .357 Magnum?’ Gooch asked.

The waitress approached, took her order for coffee and lemon pie, and left.

‘Most women put their purse on the side that isn’t by the aisle,’ Gooch said. ‘You’ve got it right next to you, on the aisle,
and your hand went in it as soon as you sat down.’

‘Like I said, Mr Gooch, I don’t know you.’

The waitress returned with the coffee, poured Eve a steam-kissed cup, refreshed Gooch’s mug, walked away.
The booth of drunken women brayed loud and long at one of their own jokes.

‘Coffee doesn’t make you jittery, right?’ Gooch said. ‘I don’t want you jittery with a gun pointing at me.’ He sounded unconcerned.
‘I’d prefer you put both hands on the table.’

She didn’t. ‘James Powell?’

‘We can talk about him later,’ Gooch said. ‘Why does the mention of your name send Bucks into a tantrum?’

She decided he wasn’t a cop or a Fed. This wasn’t the place they’d pick. Not the words they’d use. ‘He’s a thief and he’s
framed me.’

‘What did he steal?’

‘Tell me who you are before I say another word.’

Gooch glanced up and past her shoulder. ‘I’m not from your friends. Paul Bellini can lose every dime he’s got and I won’t
care.’

She tightened her grip on the gun. ‘You’re not here about the money?’

‘Money. No. Love,’ Gooch said.

‘I don’t …’ she began and then a young man with a face much like hers slid into the booth next to Gooch.

‘Hi, Ellen,’ he said. His voice was steady. A little husky. Not cold but not exactly friendly.

She didn’t move. Didn’t speak.

‘Still pointing the gun? At him or me?’ Gooch asked. ‘Really, Mrs Mosley, it’s time to let it go.’

Eve stared at the young man. Then, slowly, she put both hands on the table.

BOOK: Cut and Run
11.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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